Welcome To The Site

Welcome to Moves Export: Where Moves Gets Connected!

Moves Export allows you to export your Moves app fitness activities automatically to RunKeeper, for free! Walks, runs or cycles that Moves records can automatically be posted to RunKeeper, where you can keep track of your activities and progress over time. Or, you can take more control and post activities to RunKeeper directly from our web storyline view! And you can now post directly to Strava too!

And we do all this with a privacy policy which means that we protect your data: we don’t sell it, we don’t give it to anyone, and we don’t do anything with it other than provide these services on Moves Export.

You can find Moves Export as a featured web app inside Moves Connected Apps library here.

Want to Help?

If you like Moves Export please:

Follow us on Facebook or Twitter (round buttons in the top right-hand corner)!

Tell your friends about Moves Export, and share your content, using the share buttons (big buttons on the left-hand side)!

Provide feedback… tell us what’s broken, what you like, what you want from Moves Export…

Provide a donation to help keep Moves Export running for free and without annoying ads… Google App Engine is free to start with, but gets expensive after a while!

Why?

When I discovered Moves back in March 2013 I was amazed by it’s potential… the amount and richness of the data. The one thing I didn’t like was that the data was stuck inside Moves… I quickly thought it would be nice to export my activities to RunKeeper.

I was surprised that nobody else had already built the integration (somebody always thinks of that idea first, and has had enough time/knowledge to build it, right?), so I built it… For ages, I had been checking-in to Foursquare mostly for life-logging (IFTTT to Google Spreadsheet), so then I thought why not automatically check myself into places using Moves? So I built it…

Who?

Moves Export was created by Nick Harris, and is supported in my spare time!

How?

The key enabler for Moves Export was Google App Engine, Google’s PaaS. For people like me who are interested in development – but not at all interested in web servers, app servers, load balancing, hosting contracts, etc., etc. – it’s ideal: just build something and put it out there.